Odorizzi appeared in seven games for Tampa last year, starting four of them. He posted a respectable 3.94/1.21 line, but his 6.7 K/9 ratio was well below his career minor league mark of 9.1. Still, he limited walks (2.43 BB/9 ratio) and homers (0.92 HR/9), the latter of which is imperative for the fly-ball pitcher.

Of course, we can only glean so much from that limited sample size, but the 23-year-old righty has impressed more often than not in the minors, posting a career 3.47/1.21 line. He was even better in Triple-A last year, compiling a 3.33 ERA and 1.13 WHIP. The strikeouts have always been there, and the walks have almost always been manageable, at worst.

Unless Odorizzi really implodes this spring, he should break camp as Tampa's No. 5 starter. If he pitches well, he could keep that job when Hellickson returns. Even if he's moved to the bullpen or sent down, he'd be the first candidate if the Rays needed a fill-in.

Because he lacks a dominating fastball, Odorizzi might never live up to his strikeout-per-inning minor league numbers, but he still has the potential to be a legit fantasy contributor. He'll get knocked around from time-to-time like all young pitchers do, but for a late-round pick, you can do a lot worse.